2024f-apphil2050a-03

AP/PHIL2050 3.0 A: Philosophy of Law

Offered by: PHIL


 Session

Fall 2024

 Term

F

Format

BLEN (Blended online and classroom)

Instructor

Calendar Description / Prerequisite / Co-Requisite

What are the unique features of legal rules, which distinguish them from other kinds of rules or norms in society? What does it mean to be under a legal obligation, and why should we obey law? What is the relationship between law and morality? Course credit exclusion: GL/PHIL 2925 3.00, AP/PHIL 2050 6.00


Course Start Up

Course Websites hosted on York's "eClass" are accessible to students during the first week of the term. It takes two business days from the time of your enrolment to access your course website. Course materials begin to be released on the course website during the first week. To log in to your eClass course visit the York U eClass Portal and login with your Student Passport York Account. If you are creating and participating in Zoom meetings you may also go directly to the York U Zoom Portal.

For further course Start Up details, review the Getting Started webpage.

For IT support, students may contact University Information Technology Client Services via askit@yorku.ca or (416) 736-5800. Please also visit Students Getting Started UIT or the Getting Help - UIT webpages.


    Additional Course Instructor/Contact Details

Dr. Michael Giudice

E-mail: giudice@yorku.ca (for questions and to set up an appointment)

Office Hours:  By Appointment only

    Expanded Course Description

This is an introductory course which does not require any prior knowledge of law or philosophy.  We will begin with an account of factual features of law, legal systems, and legal reasoning, which will help us identify and discuss issues which benefit from philosophical inquiry.  We will also begin with an introduction to what philosophy is.  The main goal of the course is to develop the analytical skills needed to reason critically about the nature of law and issues arising from law’s relations to politics, morality, and other features of social life.  It is important to note that this inquiry into law does not begin with the assumption that there are easily found answers to these issues: they may resist our best attempts to resolve them.  We can, however, come to an understanding of why some issues are particularly difficult to resolve, and we will be able to suggest a variety of promising ways of facing disputes about law.

 

The course topics are divided into three main parts.  First, we will critically examine two general theories about the nature of law, natural law theory and legal positivism, with particular attention to how these theories understand the similarities and differences between law and morality.  Second, we will examine two theories of legal reasoning, constructive interpretation and legal realism, with close attention to the aims of judicial decisions and underlying presumptions about courts.  Third, we will examine a couple of critical theories which challenge law’s purported neutrality in content and application, feminist jurisprudence and critical race theory.

    Additional Requirements

Technical requirements for taking the course: internet access, and software necessary to view Microsoft Office files (MS Word and MS PowerPoint), Adobe Reader (for pdf files), and mp4 files.

 

Here are some useful links regarding computing information, resources and help:

Student Guide to Moodle

Zoom@YorkU Best Practices 

Zoom@YorkU User Reference Guide

Computing for Students Website

Student Guide to eLearning at York University

 

Mode of Delivery: This course will be delivered in a ‘blended’ format.  The lectures will be delivered remotely and asynchronously; they will be pre-recorded and uploaded by Sunday evening for each coming week, and available for viewing at your convenience.  The tutorials will be held in person on fixed days and times.

 

Office hours: by appointment only.  I will be available to meet, either in video or audio alone, via Skype or Zoom, or by phone.  To arrange a meeting, please e-mail me at giudice@yorku.ca.  In-person meetings are also possible

    Required Course Text / Readings

K. Culver and M. Giudice, eds, Readings in the Philosophy of Law, 3rd edn (Broadview Press, 2017)

*Note: the textbook is available in electronic format, available for purchase directly from the publisher: https://broadviewpress.com/.  Should you wish to purchase an electronic copy, it is recommended that you choose the “PDF” instead of the “EPUB” format, since only the “PDF” version preserves the original pagination of the textbook.

    Weighting of Course

Tutorial Participation:                                          20%

Test:                                                                   20% (Week of October 21-25, 2024)[1]

Essay:                                                                    25% (due: November 27, 2024)

Exam:                                                                    35% (date to be set by the Registrar)

[1] For those in tutorials 1 or 2, your test is on Monday, October 21, 2024, during your regularly scheduled tutorial.  For those in tutorials 3 or 4, your test is on Tuesday, October 22, 2024, during your regularly scheduled tutorial.

    Organization of the Course

The course is organized into lectures and tutorials.  The lectures have no scheduled meeting times but are delivered asynchronously allowing you to access and work through them at your own pace.  The tutorials are in person class meetings where you will have the opportunity to discuss the lectures and readings on a fixed day and time.  For each lecture, key concepts, theories, and arguments will be introduced with the aid of PowerPoint slides posted on the eClass website each week by Sunday evening.  Associated readings for each week are listed below under ‘Reading Schedule’.  Discussion of course material will take place in two ways: through individual meetings with the course instructor and teaching assistants, and at your scheduled tutorial meeting.

All assignments, with instructions, will also be posted on the eClass website.

    Course Learning Objectives

The purpose of this course is to assist students in understanding and identifying central features of life under law which merit philosophical analysis and demand justification.  In addition to this course-specific goal, you will also improve your ability to read, criticize, present, and defend arguments in a rigorous and compelling manner.

    Additional Information / Notes

Reading Schedule

*Notes: 1. Page numbers refer to Culver and Giudice, Readings in the Philosophy of Law (3rd edition, Broadview Press, 2017), and identify the readings associated with the weekly lectures.  2. The dates refer to when lectures and slides will be posted on the eClass website.  Bolded dates refer to test and essay due dates.

 

Sept. 1:          Introduction to the Course (no readings)

 

  1. What is Law?

 

Sept. 8:          Aquinas, “Treatise on Law”, 27-41.

 

Sept. 15:        Finnis, Natural Law and Natural Rights, 41-61.

 

Wahkohtowin (Cree Natural Law Theory: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NTXMrn2BZB0)

 

Sept. 22:        Austin, “The Province of Jurisprudence Determined,” 68-84.

 

Sept. 29:        Hart, “Positivism and the Separation of Law and Morals”, 84-106.

 

Oct. 6:            Hart, “Law as the Union of Primary and Secondary Rules”, and “The

Foundations of a Legal System”, 106-127.

 

Oct. 12-18:  Fall Reading week

 

Oct. 20:          The Concept of Legal System and First Nations in Canada[1]

 

Oct. 21:         Test (20%) *For those in tutorials 1 or 2.

 

Oct. 22:         Test (20%) *For those in tutorials 3 or 4.

 

  1. Legal Reasoning

 

Oct. 27:          Dworkin, “The Model of Rules I”, 133-155.

 

Nov. 3:            Dworkin, “Integrity in Law”, 155-171.

 

Nov. 10:         Holmes, “The Path of the Law”, 177-182.

 

III. Critical Theories

 

Nov. 17:        Smith, “Feminist Jurisprudence and the Nature of Law”, and

MacKinnon, “Toward Feminist Jurisprudence”, 218-236.

 

Nov. 24:         Delgado, “About Your Masthead: A Preliminary Inquiry into the Compatibility of Civil Rights and Civil Liberties”, 236-246.

 

Nov. 27:        Essay is due (25%)

[1] Note: there are no readings associated with this lecture.  Also, it will not be covered on the test.

    Relevant Links / Resources